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SPS: Beam stability and tail population at scrapers

SPS: Beam stability and tail population at scrapers. Lene Drosdal + Verena Kain , Karel Cornelis , Eric Veyrunes …. LIU-SPS-BL-P-TL. Outline. Beam scraping in the SPS for LHC injection Scraper scans to measure beam parameters Stability of beam parameters over time Full beam scan

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SPS: Beam stability and tail population at scrapers

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  1. SPS: Beam stability and tail population at scrapers • LeneDrosdal • +VerenaKain, KarelCornelis, • Eric Veyrunes… • LIU-SPS-BL-P-TL

  2. Outline • Beam scraping in the SPS for LHC injection • Scraper scans to measure beam parameters • Stability of beam parameters over time • Full beam scan • Measurement errors • Stability from 100% scans • Summary and outlook

  3. Beam Scraping • High intensity LHC beams are scraped in the SPS before the end of the ramp (403 GeV) • Typical intensity scraped: 1-3 % SPS cycle with scraping:

  4. LHC Injection Quality • Particles from the tails are lost at the transfer line collimators close to the LHC and can trigger a protection beam dump. For un-scraped beam: • 12 bunches, operational emittance: ~10 % • 12 bunches, nominal emittance (blow-up): ~26 % Injection losses – scrapers out [Injection quality MD 2011]  Not possible to inject full intensity without beam scraping!

  5. Scraping strategy • Correct scraper position: Injection losses can be reduced to an acceptable level while preserving the emittance Injection quality MD 2011 • If beam is stable: Keep scraper fixed at correct position, BUT the scraping is not constant and scrapers need to be moved  Need to investigate stability of beam

  6. Scraper scans • Procedure: Scraper in one plane retracted, the other is moved step-wise towards the beam centre: PLOTS • For each step the scraped intensity is calculated, 3 measurements are used per step • A Gaussian fit is calculated to find the beam size s and beam centre x0 with respect to the scraper

  7. Beam stability 1 • Scraper scans were done throughout May/June: • Beam centre seem to be moving by ~0.7mm BUT.. we assumed that tails are not over-populated and scraping up to ~30% is enough to fit – Only if we assume Gaussian beams!

  8. Beam stability 2 • Scraping at setting: •  Scrapers are moved because beam is changing •  Scraping is not constant Result of beam centre moving or are the beam estimates biased from a large tail population?

  9. Impact of large tail population • If the beam has very large tails the beam size is over-estimated by our fits!  A better fit can be found only using parts of the measurements closer to the core: Fit of all points Cut-off at 60%

  10. Matching with the wire scanners • Using only the beam core (>60%) we match the wire scan measurement: Expected s at scraper location:s = 0.360 * = 0.429

  11. Errors from scraping only until x% • If we scrape only until 30% the beam size is largely overestimated if we have tails! • Beam position also moved by ~0.8 mm  Same magnitude as estimated variations!

  12. Large tails  method break-down • If the tails population is large only a complete scan can be used to estimate the beam parameters and tail population: • Do we always have large tails? • Is the beam position stable? • If we have large tails scraping at a fixed % is also not a sufficient to define the scraper settings • Full beam scans to be repeated • More time consumed than for 30% scans • BLM thresholds need to be opened

  13. Stability from full scans • Scraper scan 9 July: • 36 bunches, horizontal plane • Average intensity per bunch: 1.48 e11 • Scraper position: -8.2mm • Beam size from wire scan: 0.429mm • Fit [50, 100%]: • X0 = -5.925mm • s = 0.453mm • Scraper scan 17 July: • 36 bunches, horizontal plane • Average intensity per bunch: 1.53 e11 • Scraper position: -8.3mm • Beam size from wire scan: 0.462mm • Fit [50, 100%]: • X0 = -6.574mm • s = 0.539mm Beam has moved by ~0.6mm

  14. Vertical plane • Scraper scan 17 July: • 36 bunches, vertical plane • Average intensity per bunch: 1.52 e11 • Scraper position: 3.2mm • Fit [50, 100%]: • X0 = 5.590mm • s = 0.425mm • Only one scan done in the vertical plane: • Large tails also in the vertical plane • Need to check wire scan measurement • Need more scans..

  15. Conclusions & Outlook • Full beam scans show that we have large tails • Necessary to do a full scan to measure beam parameters • Scraping at 1-3% is not sufficient to setup the scrapers • Where are the tails coming from? • The beam centre is moving at the scrapers (H) • Further scans will be done to measure the stability • Orbit stability (BPMs) needs further attention • Use the full beam scan as a tool to estimate the tail population using a double Gaussian fit:I(x) = +

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